Jump to content

Baseball Reference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Sean Forman)

Baseball Reference
Type of site
Baseball statistics
OwnerSports Reference
Created bySean Forman
URLwww.baseball-reference.com
LaunchedApril 2000; 24 years ago (2000-04)[1]
Current statusActive

Baseball Reference is a baseball statistics database maintained by Sports Reference. The site provides career statistics for Major League Baseball (MLB) players and teams as well as records, MLB draft history, and sabermetrics.

History

[edit]

Founder Sean Forman began developing the website while working on his Ph.D. dissertation in applied math and computational science at the University of Iowa. While writing his dissertation, he had also been writing articles on and blogging about sabermetrics. Forman's database was originally built from the Total Baseball series of baseball encyclopedias.[2]

The website went online in April 2000, after first being launched in February 2000 as part of the website for the Big Bad Baseball Annual. It was originally built as a web interface to the Lahman Baseball Database, though it now employs a variety of data sources.

In 2004, Forman founded Sports Reference. Sports Reference is a website that came out of the Baseball Reference website. The company was incorporated as Sports Reference, LLC in 2007.[3] In 2006, Forman left his job as a math professor at Saint Joseph's University in order to focus on Baseball Reference full-time.[2][1][4]

In February 2009, Fantasy Sports Ventures took a minority stake in Sports Reference, LLC, the parent company of Baseball Reference, for a "low seven-figure sum".[5]

At the end of April 2021, the site changed a number of identifying names, "discontinuing the use of nicknames that are racially or ethnically influenced" and "names based upon a player's disability", such as Chief Bender and Dummy Hoy, who are now listed as Charles Bender and Billy Hoy, respectively.[6]

Features

[edit]

Statistics

[edit]

The site has season, career, and minor league records (when available, back to 1888) for everyone who has played Major League Baseball, year-by-year team pages, all final league standings, all postseason numbers, voting results for all historic awards such as the Cy Young Award and MVP, head-to-head batter vs. pitcher career totals, individual statistical leaders for each season and all-time, managers' career records, the full results of all MLB player drafts, Negro leagues statistics (Baseball Reference added Negro League Statistics to its website in 2021), a baseball encyclopedia (the Bullpen),[7] and box scores and game logs from every MLB game back to 1901, among other features.[6]

To compare ballplayers to one-another it offers "Black Ink" and "Gray Ink" tests, which tally a player's dominance and overall productivity against his peers. It also offers sabermetrician Jay Jaffe's system acronymmed "JAWS" method for ranking players of different eras against each other by weighting their primes.

Bullpen

[edit]

Baseball Reference has its own baseball encyclopedia, a wiki called "Baseball Reference Bullpen", which can be edited by anyone and is modeled after Wikipedia.[8] As of December 2023, the Baseball Reference Bullpen contains over 109,100 articles.

Easter eggs and other humor

[edit]

In addition, there are a number of what the website calls "Frivolities." Examples include:

  • The Oracle of Baseball, which links any two players by common teammates in the way the pop culture favorite "Oracle of Bacon" website does.
  • A page devoted to Keith Hernandez's mustache,[4] which is the only "fictional" page on Baseball Reference.[9]
  • The site made "Tungsten Arm O'Doyle", an internet meme associated with Shohei Ohtani, a redirect to Ohtani's page.[10]
  • Although the standard player page notes a given player's favored batting and throwing arms, Paul O'Neill's page adds his kicking leg and a link to a video of the 1989 game when he kicked the ball from the outfield to first base.[11]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "About Sports Reference". Sports Reference. Retrieved August 7, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Weinreb, Michael (October 28, 2015). "The Sublime Simplicity of Baseball-Reference.com". Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 28, 2015.
  3. ^ "Company Overview of Sports Reference, LLC". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on November 8, 2013. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
  4. ^ a b "Keith Hernandez Mustache", Baseball Reference. Accessed June 8, 2015.
  5. ^ Fisher, Eric (February 16, 2009). "FSV buys stake in reference sites". Sports Business Journal. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  6. ^ a b "Changing Player Identification Names from Player Nicknames to Given Names". sports-reference.com. April 30, 2021. Retrieved May 10, 2021.
  7. ^ "Main Page – BR Bullpen". Baseball Reference. Sports Reference. Archived from the original on June 17, 2009. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  8. ^ "Main Page –BR Bullpen". Baseball Reference. Sports Reference. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved July 17, 2011.
  9. ^ Perry, Dayn. "Keith Hernandez's mustache has its own Baseball Reference page", CBS Sports website (Apr. 30, 2013).
  10. ^ Curtis, Charles (March 31, 2023). "Who's Tungsten Arm O'Doyle? The legendary Angels meme involving Shohei Ohtani, explained". For the Win. USA Today. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
  11. ^ "Paul O'Neill Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved November 21, 2024.
[edit]